Yes, "extreme weather". Other examples:
The terrible winter of 1947 - sub-zero temperatures from January to March. Coal supplies cut off to power stations, food shortages due to crops being buried under six feet of snow.
The great North Sea storm surge of 1953 - Over 200 sq miles of eastern England flooded, more than 300 lives lost here and 1,800 in The Netherlands.
The "big freeze" of 1963 - Snow covered the country for two months; six foot drifts in Kent; the sea froze for over a mile from the shore in Herne Bay; a 36 hour blizzard in February to top it all up; no temperatures above zero from Boxing Day until 8th March. My school - along with most others - remained open almost throughout.
The drought of 1976 - temperatures above 80F across England for almost three weeks, above 90F in London for six days in a row, no rain in most of southern England for 45 days in July and August.
The 1979 Fastnet storm - huge (unpredicted) storm in the Atlantic off Ireland. 75 boats sunk, 19 people drowned during the Fastnet yacht race.
The great storm of 1990 - 3m trees downed, widespread flooding across England, power lost to almost 1m homes, some not restored for a week.
And all this before "Global Warming" or its alter ego "Climate Change" was ever really thought about.